Question
Updated on
gabrieljose
20 Jun 2016
- Portuguese (Brazil)
English (US)
Question about English (US)
Answers
When you "disagree" with an answer
The owner of it will not be notified.Only the user who asked this question will see who disagreed with this answer.
OK
meese
20 Jun 2016
- English (US)
They're basically the same thing. I tried to think of any difference, but I couldn't. Haha. So yeah, no difference
☆彡
- Report copyright infringement
0likes
Was this answer helpful?
Was this useful?
- Why did you respond with "Hmm..."?
- Obviously wrong
- Explanation is not enough
- Written in a language I can't understand
- Answer is not related to the question
- Other reason
- Your feedback will not be shown to other users.
suzypie
20 Jun 2016
- English (US)
- Spanish (Mexico)
They mean the same thing, there's not really any difference ☺️
- Report copyright infringement
0likes
Was this answer helpful?
Was this useful?
- Why did you respond with "Hmm..."?
- Obviously wrong
- Explanation is not enough
- Written in a language I can't understand
- Answer is not related to the question
- Other reason
- Your feedback will not be shown to other users.
Ale_Di
30 Aug 2020
- English (US)
@gabrieljose
I had a similar question long ago but with a different sentence,
"Are we there yet?"
"Are we there already?"
Here in the US, when you are desperate to get somewhere the first one is used a lot more. I just don't know why. That's what we're used to hearing. 😅 🤷🏼♀️
- Report copyright infringement
0likes
Was this answer helpful?
Was this useful?
- Why did you respond with "Hmm..."?
- Obviously wrong
- Explanation is not enough
- Written in a language I can't understand
- Answer is not related to the question
- Other reason
- Your feedback will not be shown to other users.
Related questions
- Oh by the way, it’s already 12:00. can we talk about it during in lunch? I’m starving. lunchの前の前...
- Is this correct? I make the lunch. I made the lunch. I will make the lunch. I am making the ...
- We've just had lunchWe've just eaten lunch.Are they correct?
- come over for lunch と同じようにgo over for lunch と言えるか
- He used to bring his own lunch to work almost every day while I took some time off work, but now ...
Similar questions
- What is the difference between have lunch and eat lunch ?
- I will go to have lunch Does this sound natural?
- I'm off for my lunch!お昼行ってこようっと。 Does this sound natural?
Recommended Questions
- Show more
- When I watch reels on Instagram ,many comments say 'car' while they watch cats' video.Why?Do they...
- If you are not the correct person, please direct me the correct one.Does this sentence sound nat...
- What do people mean when they say 'no pun intended'
- what is correct? Where are you study?OrWhere do you study?Thank you.
- Unde pot găsi câștiguri mari online?
Topic Questions
- Show more
- What does "come with" mean in the following sentence?Often in life, the idea of genuinely doing ...
- Could I ask what’s the difference between hints, clues, and tips in RPGs?If you provide me with...
- In the sentence "Will you lend me your bike?" is the word will pronounced with the tip of the ton...
- 这段英文听起来自然吗?I'm not sure if I have one specific favorite type of music, to be honest. For me, mu...
- Hello i dont understand how to use négation for the verb «to be» in English. How i know if i ne...
Newest Questions
- Show more
- Could anyone check my journal entry?My kids and I played with bubble machine in front of our ho...
- What does "play out" mean here?⬇️Each episode will unpack how these factors play out in our rela...
- Debbie knows how to sew and………………….. herself.a- has all her dresses made b –gets all her dresse...
- What does "come with" mean in the following sentence?Often in life, the idea of genuinely doing ...
- Does this sound natural?You hear people brag about how they're grinding all the way up to the we...
Previous question/ Next question
- How do you say this in Korean? you're welcome/bitteschön
- How do you say this in Japanese? hi I'm skye
What’s this symbol?
The Language Level symbol shows a user's proficiency in the languages they're interested in. Setting your Language Level helps other users provide you with answers that aren't too complex or too simple.
Beginner
Has difficulty understanding even short answers in this language.
Beginner-Intermediate
Can ask simple questions and can understand simple answers.
Intermediate
Can ask all types of general questions and can understand longer answers.
Advanced
Can understand long, complex answers.
Sign up for premium, and you can play other user's audio/video answers.
Learn about premium features
What are gifts?
Show your appreciation in a way that likes and stamps can't.
By sending a gift to someone, they will be more likely to answer your questions again!
If you post a question after sending a gift to someone, your question will be displayed in a special section on that person’s feed.